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office 2018: Blood Relative

December 26, 2018

Dev Hynes contains multitudes. Profilers can’t help but to use the term “polymath” in describing Hynes and his varied creative talents, the most remarkable of which orbit the world of music. The British-born artist’s early projects include upbeat post-punk trio Test Icicles and guitar-pop act Lightspeed Champion, but he rose to a whole new level of prominence making loosely R&B-inflected tracks under the name Blood Orange.

I’m sitting in Dev’s studio deep in Manhattan’s Chinatown with him and Ian Isiah, the singer and underground New York fashion figure, who Hynes has connected with over the years. We’re talking without much of an agenda, which seems to be how Dev likes it.

For the latest Blood Orange album, Negro Swan, he wrote songs in various locations across the world, using whatever instruments might be at his disposal, welcoming people from different parts of his life to speak and perform on the tracks. He wrote the music for himself, rather than any audience, and with no strict objective other than to let it happen, rather than make it happen.

Earlier in his career he’d spoken about leaving behind former aliases and projects in an attempt to avoid the influence of expectation, but when I bring up that mentality he says it’s a thing of the past. With Blood Orange he has found a project which can continuously reflect an honest and evolving version of himself. Some aspects of the work may be collaborative, some more individual, and one album may not sound quite like the last. But every decision that goes into it is Dev’s, and every note a new chance to reveal another side of the musician’s endlessly inventive collective consciousness.

OFFICE — So it must be a pretty exciting time for you, with the album coming out.

IAN ISIAH — I think the world is really excited. Like, actually.

DEV HYNES — Really? That’s cool.

II — But it’s like half music people, and half like woke people who just see Negro Swan and are like “Oh, it’s about to go down, in like, awake-ness.” And I’m like yeah sure, it is about to go down in awake-ness. I mean, I’m excited.

O — Ian, I was just watching the video for “Jewelry” that you had a role in casting, and you were in it as well. I’m curious if you could explain how it came about.

II — Here it is. Dev had an idea, and then we figured out a few boys in the neighborhood that made it look very New York, because that’s the spot. Very New York situations. We all got together and went to West 4th and just like, danced around for a while. A lot of people in the park thought we were also doing a performance piece because within 100 feet there was a weird pianist on the side doing a little show and all that. Then there’s us, no shirts, jumping around with a camera and stuff, so there was a lot happening that day. But the crowd appreciated it.

DH — Yeah there was a little crowd, I always forget that.

II — Yeah, at West 4th. It was funny, but it was fun. A lot of those boys were like old and new friends of ours that aren’t doing anything and I’m happy that they were like, “Oh yeah, of course.” They were actually fans of Dev already, I didn’t even have to push a whole treatment, those are all just homies.

O — When did you two meet?

II — Maybe four, five years ago? Downtown. Post Dev moving to New York and like, living in New York and then once he was really settled I came around and we became friends. I don’t know how, there’s no specific day or anything, I think it’s just downtown New York fun-ness.

DH — And he’s the first voice you hear on Freetown .

II — That’s crazy. But yeah, at first it wasn’t even like a music friendship. Just like a homie situation. Then it got musical and it’s a wrap from there.

O — At what point did you, Dev, feel that New York was where you were based, like you were no longer just visiting here for a few months at a time.

DH — I guess, maybe not sentimental, but I look back and think about stuff. Cause you know what’s weird, is that I’m 32 now and my memories of England are of a teenager. So it’s kind of an interesting thing to be British and feel British, but the memories of living it is off, like I don’t remember.

O — Like the British you is a teenager.

DH — It might be perfect actually.

II — You only need to know about British ‘90s actually. [ laughs ] You didn’t miss anything.

DH — True.

DH — I think Cupid Deluxe is kind of about that. It’s a different record if you look across the board at the albums I’ve made. It’s a little bit outside because it’s mainly about me being comfortable. It came out 2011, so yeah, around then is when I felt like alright, I live here.

O — Was there something here that you felt you couldn’t get elsewhere?

DH — Not even like that. I mean, you know, I was younger. I didn’t really come to New York for a reason. I didn’t live anywhere. I was couch surfing in London and had a backpack and a friend of a friend’s old roommate had a couch in Long Island City, so I just came and stayed on the couch.

II — And now you like own Chinatown. He’s a part of the list of where you mention people in Chinatown. You’re like, mentioned. You’re like the Chinatown real estate.

DH —[ laughs ] That’s hilarious. That’s fucking funny.

O — Do you maintain ties in the UK? Are you back there a lot?

DH — I’m not there a lot. This last year I’ve been there more times than before. But I have some really close friends there that I talk to daily.

O — Are you sentimental about it at all as a place? I know this album touches upon stories from your past there.

O — I mean, it is a weird feeling. I grew up in San Francisco, a city that is so unrecognizable in a lot of ways compared to when I was a teenager. I’m 32 as well and going back there it’s sort of the same thing, I have these memories and they’re fine, but I can’t access that version of the city anymore. It’s not there.

DH — You know what, I even felt that way, not to go so cliché with it, but last year one of the soccer teams I was playing for was playing on the waterfront in Williamsburg, and I don’t think I’ve been there in six or seven years and I just remember riding my bike across the bridge and down Kent and just being like, “What the fuck!” Some of the venues I first played when I did solo Blood Orange don’t exist. They’re gone, like dust. It was kind of a crazy feeling because I guess I’ve lived here long enough to have memories like that. So that was kind of crazy. It was even crazier to have that feeling about a place that I live now. I mean I feel like I’ve been here a long time, but it still feels new.

O — Right, so to see evidence of that time passing puts it in perspective.

DH — I’m like, “Damn, I’m old!” I’m actually old.

O — You recorded this album in a lot of different places, what pulls you in those different directions? How did you choose those cities?

DH — It was more that I was going there just hanging and I’d record wherever I was. The Japan stuff, we were playing at a festival and I’d just set up in the hotel rooms and record. LA, I was going there quite a bit to kind of go away and stay at [ASAP] Rocky’s place a lot and record. And Florence I just kind of fell in love with, I did an art residency there, and recorded while I was there. It’s like, one of my favorite cities in the world. I like the size and the classical-ness of it all, and I love the coffee. It’s great. If they had like a good weed plug, then it truly would be the greatest city in the world.

II — You really did make this album all over the world.

DH — Yeah, I don’t know how.

II — Its fab. [ laughs ] I’m impressed because I’m not used to it. I’m a church boy, I’m from the church. I know music like the back of my hand, but in that sense. Before Dev I wasn’t even interested in coming into this side of the music world. But now I’m in it and I see Dev, we’ll be hanging out but he’ll have a laptop out working. We’ll be waiting for a flight and he’ll be recording a track and I’m like, “How is this possible? Like, what are these programs?” I didn’t know that whole lifestyle could be so mobile.

O — But that’s new, right? Like, grand scheme you think back on all these albums and it’s like “No, the band was holed up in some studio in the forest for a month to record this.”

DH — But I do romanticize that, though. I’ve always loved that as a concept. When I see people do that I’m always like, “Ah, that’s so cool.”

O — Maybe the next one. [ laughs ] You can find one spot.

DH — Yeah, I mean I’m into it.

O — For this album, you’ve talked about how you’d find these different locations and just work with the instruments and equipment that was already there. Was that something intentional, in terms of self-imposed limitations and parameters?

DH — Yeah it was super intentional, and I love it. Like the last song on the album, this song called “Smoke” which is just guitar and voices because there was just a guitar there. [ laughs ] I would never have written it otherwise, it wouldn’t have happened.

II — Well, once again, it proves my point that Dev is behind the scenes of his own project. I also don’t understand the staff behind it because he is kind of the staff. But, it’s also new for me to see in this music world because this is normal in fashion. Just like, directionally based and just being able to be a director within like this whole, whatever your project is, and it’s cute to see how Dev does it in music because music direction is a thing obviously in band life, and as a whole, like playing live. Music direction is a thing in general in music, but music direction in production is a huge, huge thing and its cool that Dev is the one who does that and he’s not looking for the help that’s in that studio to make it happen. This is not normal for artists, or these new artists or people that aren’t as musically inclined.

O — They need the team.

II — They need that full huge budget and team to make this one person. With Dev, you really just need PA’s. You probably just need PA’s to facilitate, which is great.

O — And yet, you’re so collaborative in terms of other people’s projects. You’ve got a long list of other artists that you’ve worked with. Is that something that enabled you, because you’ve done it for other people and you’ve done it for yourself, you’re like, “I can cover all these bases.”?

DH — Yeah, I guess with me it’s like, I don’t know what the point of me doing a project would be if I had someone else helping. It’s like there would be no point in the project existing, because it’s more of just seeing what I could do.

O — Okay, yeah. Is it like if you wrote a script and handed it off to a director and it becomes their thing?

DH — Yeah, but I would be into it if that was the goal. If the goal was to see what would happen to a director with the script.

O — Right, if it was like a two-part authorship, or whatever it is.

DH — Yeah, but essentially with Blood Orange, it’s actually more. It’s a little bit of the reverse. It’s kind of more to see what would happen if I was just the director, you know? Like I’ll write a script, but I’m interested in seeing what people coming in can do, and what I can then make that into. I think people get hung up and don’t do that, because they feel like they would lose ownership. I think they don’t think about making the best thing. They get tripped out thinking. Like I play bass on my records because I’m in the room. But if there was a bassist in the room, they could play it. You know, I’m not like, “I need to play bass on this.” It’s more like, “This needs bass, there’s no one in this room,” you know?

O — I mean in a way it’s interesting that you don’t go by Dev Hynes, because that would be a little more “It’s all me, every instrument on here is me, the producer is me, the writer, everything.” But Blood Orange ends up being more of an open group, or a collective, in that way.

DH — Yeah, I love that. That’s how I want it to be. Even though it is me, it’s not actually just me. This also could be some UK shit, cause if you go back to ‘90s, it’s really UK to have a group who is one person or two people that has tons of guests all the way throughout. Its engrained in English music, Massive Attack, Prodigy, Gorillaz. It’s like a thing where you have producers where you know its these people making it, but they might sing on the song, they might not.

O — So, you mention that you make music for yourself, and you’ve spoken about how performing live isn’t necessarily something that you’ve embraced or been able to love in the way that some performers have. Would you prefer it to be a more intimate experience when you perform?

DH — Yeah, I guess I would. I kind of worked out what it was recently, because it’s kind of been hard to explain it, but I think I’ve got it now. I like performing music live, but it’s more of a twisted irony that the one music I write with no intention to perform live is actually my only real vehicle to perform live. That’s kind of what it is. It’s like I work on Blood Orange music and I’m never thinking about anything live. It’s the furthest thing from my mind. I’m trying to think of this, I don’t know world or whatever, for people to listen. But then if that is what is popular, then that’s what you perform live.

O — Right, you can’t show up and play a bunch of improvisational shit for people to interpret.

DH — And I will never do that. The only time I will do that is if I say very clearly beforehand that that’s what it is. Now actually I have a music director for live shows, which is really cool cause I never had one before.

O — Somebody to come up with a little bit of a vision.

DH — That’s exactly it, and you just get to deliver more.

II — You get to deliver more on the mic. You get to deliver more on the guitar when he plays cause it’s freed up with thinking about all the rest of it.

DH — It’s so true. You’re completely right. I can play better.

II — Singing too.

DH — But more involved in the moment than before. Ian’s involvement in my shows has changed everything.

O — In what way? And also what does that involvement entail?

II — I think I was raised more live than production or studio.

O — Was that a church thing?

II — Yeah, it was no choice. All we would do is what we do live and recording was not a thing for me until I was 22 or something like that. I mean of course I recorded gospel stuff and we recorded for fun, but recording professionally wasn’t a thing for me until I was grown. So like I’m used to the live, but I push him a lot with the live. Cause first, it’s a band, full of all great musicians.

DH — Yeah, crazy musicians.

II — So like it’s like tight right now, and I want him to feel that so he just delivers different, especially with the new album coming out, like, all new delivery. Fresh.

O — You talk about not paying much attention to the music scene, or reviews. So how do you decide what to play?

DH — Spotify and Apple Music.

O — No kidding.

DH — I looked at my artist profiles, like, “What do people actually like?” [laughs] I literally pulled from those and made a set.

O — It’s almost like a data-driven set list. So what do you think is the biggest change that’s taken place in the live show, or something that you may want to see more of? What direction are you trying to help bring it in?

II — Real tight sound, just like full, tight sound music. So tight that the cues go right by because everyone is like in one mind, through the music.

DH — Yeah, yeah. That’s fire.

II — And then allowing our audience to be like, okay this is the formula. One band, one sound. And then they can start understanding that this is the line that they missed out on that they referenced so like you can just get in on this vibe of really being involved in music.

O — Is that something you’re looking for in choosing the band that supports you on stage? You can’t just plug somebody in, somebody has to kind of feel and understand what you’ve written.

DH — That’s why nearly everyone is either jazz or church or both.

O — Both are genres that touch on this one mind aspect. People are writing together on stage, or they’re singing together with one voice. I mean, it’s even in the lyrics in the church music.

DH — I’ve never even thought about that, it’s literally everyone in the band. [laughs]

II — The new live band is set and its really tight.

O — So I want to ask about the spoken elements on the album. Cause it sounds like something that came to you, but that you enjoyed searching into a little bit. Getting some of those elements in there, which is new, right?

DH — Kind of. I guess on Freetown it existed, but they were samples and with this it was all new recorded things.

O — Did everybody know that this was potentially going to be on the album, or is this something that you asked for? What was the process in getting some of those monologues?

DH — Puff just did it, I didn’t even ask.

O — I was reading about how he kind of called you out of the blue the first time?

DH — Yeah, it was after Freetown dropped.

O — Cause we have Fab 5 Freddy interviewing Redman for this issue as well, and Fab sends the transcript and is like, “Oh by the way, Diddy FaceTimed us in the middle of the interview.” [laughs]

DH — He FaceTimed me this morning.

O — How does this guy just keep popping up in all these places?

DH — That’s wild, bro. He’s fucking omnipresent, Puff. Yeah, he’s the fucking guy. But yeah, he just did that one monologue. That was not like cued or written. It just happened. The music all existed in that part. It was just going to be kind of an instrumental outro. Yeah, his monologue was longer and I cut it. And then with Janet it was a conversation here. I don’t have the book, but there was like a Negro Swanbook that I was filling up as I was working on the record, and I would talk to her and play her stuff and she would sit and write and then I’d talk back and she would write in the book and I just recorded all of it. So none of it was to music. It was just like large audio file talking. But it was always relating to things in the record, so it just kind of worked. She talks pretty rhythmically, musically anyway, so I tried to work with that where I was flowing into the music.

O — Lastly, I wanted to ask about the title, Negro Swan and then the winged figure on the cover and in the video. Is there like a little bit of a sort of mythology that arises when you’re writing an album like this?

DH — A little bit, I guess. The only thing I actually ever studied was English literature and I think that’s always at play. A friend of mine recently said, whose known me when I worked on albums, that they think I work on albums as if they’re a book. It kind of makes sense because I have it tracklisted out way before anything is finished. Every decision that you hear when listening has been thought out over 50 times. It’s why it’s in that moment in where it is. Every album I’ve made, I’ve had the title way before things were written. Like I had the idea of it, wherever that idea is, it’s usually something that’s hard for me to describe. It’s usually imagery. I’ve been thinking recently that this album, instead of being after Freetown it feels like it’s inside it. It’s a moment in the album that has been like focused in on and then expanded.

II — A capsule. [laughs]

DH — [laughs] It’s a capsule collection!

II — Cute.

As 2018 comes to a close, office is counting down some of our favorite stories from the year. Keep your eye out for more highlights this week.

For those of you who didn’t get chance to go or even if you did end up attending, office raged along at EZoo, even linking up with artists like South African musician Kyle Watson to chat. “My set was amazing; the energy in the tent was next level… You just feed off of the crowd on the floor, and it just goes organically from there. It’s way higher energy here than at clubs, and the energy is so strong all the way through,” said Watson who had just sat down moments after his set ended.

It comes at no surprise that this year’s festival boasted the event’s largest turnout since 2013. The lineup featured a slew of high profile artists, including Zedd, Diplo, Dog Blood (Skrillex :: Boys Noize) and many more iconic names. Playing house and trance to dubstep to over 100,000 attendees, the event hosted a wide array of electronic music genres across four different stages.

Premiere: Trentemøller's "Try a Little"

August 30, 2019

It’s the dawning of the Age of Danes.

Since 1997, scientist Anders Trentemøller has been putting the spotlight on Copenhagen’s art scene. Transporting to a different plane by way of time and space, Warpaint was formed back in 2004 by the sisters Shannyn Sossamon, Jenny Lee Lindberg, and two childhood friends out on the west coast where the sunlight just hits differently.

Then in 2017, Trentemøller finally meets Lee, and they melted their brains together for the first time.

In a futuristic laboratory somewhere (probably LA), Trentemøller and Lee engineered the most stunning tune in the world, titled “Hands Down.” Unsatisfied with their orphan creation, the two musicologists were inspired to alchemize a sibling song, “Try a Little.” Their second song is accompanied by nearly four minutes of psychedelic feed produced by the Emmy-nominated Thomas McMahan.

After viewing McMahan’s previous works, Trentemøller “totally fell in love with… Thomas’ lofi VHS style, and it really fitted [sic] the vibe of the song,” according to the artist himself. Shortly after, Lee journeyed to the McMahan studio in LA to take part in the video—which, notably, was a decided break from the usual B/W videos.

“Try a Little” is synth driven, designed to move the body. The percussions intensify to conquer your eardrums, and the guitar looms in your consciousness with ease. The song itself reads more pop than the rest of the album titled “Obverse,” which contains mainly experimental instrumental tracks. Both the melodic musings of the mad musicians and the colourful camera concoction bleed into one another in harmonic convergence.

In a stream of consciousness, Lee is searching for herself: to reconnect and, perhaps, recalibrate. As Lee pleads to herself, “Be a little bit more for me” in an effort to find emotional clarity, she runs on loop. The audience is left to ponder: Is she running from herself? Is she running towards her inner child? Perhaps, she is running from you, dear reader… Most importantly, will she ever stop running? The answer remains unclear.

office had the opportunity to premiere the new music video. Take a gander below.

Blue Collared Baby

August 29, 2019

I first met Bill Priss at a mutual friend’s party on the 4th of July. There was a pool and plenty of wine, but most noticeably, an overflowing amount of good company. Bill, along with many other friends, exemplified a community of love and support, at one point expressing itself in a massive group hug in a hot tub.

It would have been hard to imagine then, that only a year ago, Bill had started on a journey to regain stability after an anxiety-driven breakdown. As a way to reflect on this period, Blue Collared Baby, Bill’s debut EP, was born.

Providing an intimate invitation through his lyrics and alt dream pop melodies, Bill Priss shares his own coming of age story. Touching upon his past relationships, growing pains and leaving his small town in Maine, he ultimately finds himself ruminating in the present. Bill created his completely independent and deeply personal project after teaching himself how to mix and produce tracks, write lyrics and lay down harmonies. From its start within his home studio in a Williamsburg basement, Blue Collared Baby is finally ready to be shared with the world on August 29th. As Bill sings on "Aries", he’s onto a new phase⁠—entirely rejuvenated, and showing everyone that self-love will only bring good things to come.

Are you excited about the release?

Yea, I’m a bit nervous, but I’m definitely excited. I kind of just feel like I want it out of me. I feel like a pregnant woman...

It’s due.

It’s past due, actually it’s a couple of months past due. I just feel like I’m coming up from the phase that I wrote and made it in, and now, I just want to get it out in the world.

You had mentioned this album came from an anxiety-driven point in your life. Can you share what was going on then?

This time last summer, I started to really take a hold of my mental health like going to therapy, after having a really tumultuous summer. It was an accumulation of a ton of stuff I’d ignored over the year, including high school issues and college issues. After many panic attacks and calls home to mom, I needed to take care of myself, and I was like, "ok, how do I do that?" I also had to make the choice: do I want to make music? Do I actually want to do this? I had just graduated from NYU.

Were you studying music?

I was studying acting. I took singing lessons, but making and recording music is very different. While I was in school, I had to teach myself everything, making a beat, recording. Luckily, since I was a singer, I knew how to lay down harmonies, but in terms of actual production, I had to teach myself on the side. Now I have an acting degree, proof that I can pursue an acting career. But, psych, I’m going to do music instead. I said let me actually do it and set a schedule and get writing and come up with a project. So, it worked in tandem: creating actual songs that I felt proud of, and coming out of this place of healing and finding mental clarity. And just learning how to love yourself. A bit of a growing up point.

Do you find it scary to be so open and honest with your lyrics?

Not really. I’ve always been a pretty open person. I was more scared to sing. I’ve always been very comfortable with lyrics. I think if the lyrics aren't true to me then it feels weird. And the truer things are always the hardest ones to say, but then it ends up not being hard because it feels right to say. I was more worried about like, is this good?

How is it being a queer independent artist? Are you looking to get signed with a label eventually, or do you prefer having the creative freedom to do whatever you want?

I like the freedom. I’m an Aries, so I like being in charge. I like being able to do this beginning phase on my own, to almost prove to myself I could do it on my own. But it’s getting to a point where I’m finding it very overwhelming to be the writer and musician, but also my own manager, my own PR. I’m sending all the emails. Before, I used to say that I didn't want to be signed to a label. But now. I feel like it’s necessary to get to the next level. And if I do, it would always honor my freedom to be queer and talk about what I want to. And if people don’t understand that, then I don’t think they understand my music.

I think we’re finally at a point in our culture or society where there’s so much openness and acceptance of gender identities and sexual preferences. Do you feel comfortable expressing the things you want to say now, or have you always felt that way?

As soon as I realize something about myself, I want to express it. The hardest part is always grappling with certain issues about yourself. What does it mean to be you and move about the world? How do you be your true self? I think there’s always been points in my life, where I’ve thought, like about my gender, that it doesn’t align with what I’m supposed to be doing, but it’s how I feel. I guess it makes me gender non-conforming because I want to wear makeup, but I just want to wear makeup because it makes me feel pretty. Tell me a girl that doesn’t want to wear mascara. To speak in this moment where these differences are being honored is incredible, and if you’re smart, you'll realize that’s the future. We all love our love songs, but people want more. Sometimes you want to listen to something you hear yourself in.

To speak in this moment where these differences are being honored is incredible, and if you’re smart, you'll realize that’s the future.

Where does the title Blue Collared Baby come from?

I was trying to come up with what it meant to be in New York, but have this past and childhood that wasn’t really seen here. I wear a lot of denim. Often, I’ll be wearing denim on denim. I think it was after a conversation with my dad where I was trying to explain something to him that was happening in New York. There were a lot of times where I felt like I had to explain why things are a big deal, creatively, because he doesn’t understand. It was such a moment where, at the end of the day, yeah you went to college, yes you had a full-time job⁠ (he was the mayor of my town), yes, you’ve done all these great things in life, but at the end of the day, you are just a blue collared dude. I was also researching the term and found that the lapels of the people working those jobs were usually denim, so it was really perfect. Baby comes from the fact that I felt like a lot of the stuff I wrote about was about growing up and learning how to take care of myself as an adult. Also, in a way, I’ll always be a blue collar baby no matter what I do. It just felt very emblematic. I said it to my friend, and she was like, "that’s it, that’s the title."

Would you consider yourself a spiritual person?

I grew up catholic and had let go of that. I’m starting to get more into crystals and learning about the stars. I find horoscopes very interesting; I love to chat about it. If anything, I feel like it’s more of a spirituality with the world. I do think that everyone has a certain type of energy and the type of energy you put out is the energy you receive.

What do you do for stress relief?

I run a lot. I make lists. I don’t drink. I used to, but that stopped. I’ve been sober for 9 months now. I do smoke, but I’m not doing literally anything else, so I’m letting myself partake in this one thing. I like going for walks. Sunsets are a big thing; I find them very nice.